DESCRIPTION

Provides coordination of widget drawing activities. A Window represents a region of the screen that a widget occupies.

Windows cannot directly be constructed. Instead they are obtained by sub-division of other windows, ultimately coming from the root window associated with the terminal.

Normally all windows are visible, but a window may be hidden by calling the hide method. After this, the window will not respond to any of the drawing methods, until it is made visible again with the show method. A hidden window will not receive focus or input events. It may still receive geometry change events if it is resized.

Sub Windows

A division of a window made by calling make_sub or make_float obtains a window that represents some portion of the drawing area of the parent window. Child windows are stored in order; make_sub adds a new child to the end of the list, and make_float adds one at the start.

Higher windows (windows more towards the start of the list), will always handle input events before lower siblings. The extent of windows also obscures lower windows; drawing on lower windows may not be visible because higher windows are above it.

Deferred Child Window Operations

In order to minimise the chances of ordering-specific bugs in window event handlers that cause child window creation, reordering or deletion, the actual child window list is only mutated after the event processing has finished, by using a Tickitlater block.

METHODS

close

$win->close

Removes the window from its parent and clears any event handlers set using bind_event. Also recursively closes any child windows.

Currently this is an optional method, as child windows are stored as weakrefs, so should be destroyed when the last reference to them is dropped. Widgets should make sure to call this method anyway, because this will be changed in a future version.

make_sub

$sub = $win->make_sub( $top, $left, $lines, $cols )

Constructs a new sub-window of the given geometry, and places it at the end of the child window list; below any other siblings.

make_hidden_sub

$sub = $win->make_hidden_sub( $top, $left, $lines, $cols )

Constructs a new sub-window like make_sub, but the window starts initially hidden. This avoids having to call hide separately afterwards.

make_float

$float = $win->make_float( $top, $left, $lines, $cols )

Constructs a new sub-window of the given geometry, and places it at the start of the child window list; above any other siblings.

make_popup

$popup = $win->make_popup( $top, $left, $lines, $cols )

Constructs a new floating popup window starting at the given coordinates relative to this window. It will be sized to the given limits.

This window will have the root window as its parent, rather than the window the method was called on. Additionally, a popup window will steal all keyboard and mouse events that happen, regardless of focus or mouse position. It is possible that, if the window has an on_mouse handler, that it may receive mouse events from outwide the bounds of the window.

bind_event

$id = $win->bind_event( $ev, $code, $data )

Installs a new event handler to watch for the event specified by $ev, invoking the $code reference when it occurs. $code will be invoked with the given window, the event name, an event information object, and the $data value it was installed with. bind_event returns an ID value that may be used to remove the handler by calling unbind_event_id.

$ret = $code->( $win, $ev, $info, $data )

The type of $info will depend on the kind of event that was received, as indicated by $ev. The information structure types are documented in Tickit::Event.

bind_event (with flags)

$id = $win->bind_event( $ev, $flags, $code, $data )

The $code argument may optionally be preceeded by an integer of flag values. This should be zero to apply default semantics, or a bitmask of constants. The constants are documented in "bind_event (with flags)" in Tickit::Term.

unbind_event_id

$win->unbind_event_id( $id )

Removes an event handler that returned the given $id value.

raise

$win->raise

lower

$win->lower

Moves the order of the window in its parent one higher or lower relative to its siblings.

raise_to_front

$win->raise_to_front

Moves the order of the window in its parent to be the front-most among its siblings.

lower_to_back

$win->lower_to_back

Moves the order of the window in its parent to be the back-most among its siblings.

parent

$parentwin = $win->parent

Returns the parent window; i.e. the window on which make_sub or make_float was called to create this one

subwindows

@windows = $win->subwindows

Returns a list of the subwindows of this one. They are returned in order, highest first.

root

$rootwin = $win->root

Returns the root window

term

$term = $win->term

Returns the Tickit::Term instance of the terminal on which this window lives.

Note that it is not guaranteed that this method will return the same Perl-level terminal instance that the root window was constructed with. In particular, if the root window in fact lives on a mock terminal created by Tickit::Test::MockTerm this method may "forget" this fact, returning an object instance simply in the Tickit::Term class instead. While the instance will still be useable as a terminal, the fact it was a mock terminal may get forgotten.

tickit

show

$win->show

Makes the window visible. Allows drawing methods to output to the terminal. Calling this method also exposes the window, invoking the on_expose handler. Shows the cursor if this window currently has focus.

hide

$win->hide

Makes the window invisible. Prevents drawing methods outputting to the terminal. Hides the cursor if this window currently has focus.

is_visible

$visible = $win->is_visible

Returns true if the window is currently visible.

resize

$win->resize( $lines, $cols )

Change the size of the window.

reposition

$win->reposition( $top, $left )

Move the window relative to its parent.

change_geometry

$win->change_geometry( $top, $left, $lines, $cols )

A combination of resize and reposition, to atomically change all the coordinates of the window. Will only invoke on_geom_changed once, rather than twice as would be the case calling the above methods individually.

expose

$win->expose( $rect )

Marks the given region of the window as having been exposed, to invoke the on_expose event handler on itself, and all its child windows. The window's own handler will be invoked first, followed by all the child windows, in screen order (top to bottom, then left to right).

If $rect is not supplied it defaults to exposing the entire window area.

The on_expose event handler isn't invoked immediately; instead, the Tickitlater method is used to invoke it at the next round of IO event handling. Until then, any other window could be exposed. Duplicates are suppressed; so if a window and any of its ancestors are both queued for expose, the actual handler will only be invoked once per unique region of the window.

set_focus_child_notify

$win->set_focus_child_notify( $notify )

If set to a true value, the on_focus event handler will also be invoked when descendent windows gain or lose focus, in addition to when it gains or loses focus itself. Defaults to false; meaning the on_focus handler only receives notifications about the window itself.

rect

pen

set_pen

$win->set_pen( $pen )

Replace the current Tickit::Pen object for this window with a new one. The object reference will be stored, allowing it to be shared with other objects. If undef is set, then a new, blank pen will be constructed.

getpenattr

$val = $win->getpenattr( $attr )

Returns a single attribue from the current pen

get_effective_pen

$pen = $win->get_effective_pen

Returns a new Tickit::Pen containing the effective pen attributes for the window, combined by those of all its parents.

get_effective_penattr

$val = $win->get_effective_penattr( $attr )

Returns the effective value of a pen attribute. This will be the value of this window's attribute if set, or the effective value of the attribute from its parent.

Attempt to scroll the rectangle of the window (either given by a Tickit::Rect or defined by the first four parameters) by an amount given by the latter two. Since most terminals cannot perform arbitrary rectangle scrolling, this method returns a boolean to indicate if it was successful. The caller should test this return value and fall back to another drawing strategy if the attempt was unsuccessful.

Optionally, a Tickit::Pen instance or hash of pen attributes may be provided, to override the background colour used for erased sections behind the scroll.

The cursor may move as a result of calling this method; its location is undefined if this method returns successful. The terminal pen, in particular the background colour, may be modified by this method even if it fails to scroll the terminal (and returns false).

This method will enqueue all of the required expose requests before returning, so in this case the return value is not interesting.

scroll

$success = $win->scroll( $downward, $rightward )

A shortcut for calling scrollrect on the entire region of the window.

scroll_with_children

$win->scroll_with_children( $downward, $rightward )

Similar to scroll but ignores child windows of this one, moving all of the terminal content paying attention only to obscuring by newer siblings of ancestor windows.

This method is experimental, intended only for use by Tickit::Widget::ScrollBox. After calling this method, the terminal content will have moved and the windows drawing them will be confused unless the window position was also updated. ScrollBox takes care to do this.

cursor_at

$win->cursor_at( $line, $col )

Sets the position in the window at which the terminal cursor will be placed if this window has focus. This method does not force the window to take the focus though; for that see take_focus.

cursor_visible

$win->cursor_visible( $visible )

Sets whether the terminal cursor is visible on the window when it has focus. Normally it is, but passing a false value will make the cursor hidden even when the window is focused.

cursor_shape

$win->cursor_shape( $shape )

Sets the shape that the terminal cursor will have if this window has focus. This method does not force the window to take the focus though; for that see take_focus. Valid values for $shape are the various CURSORSHAPE_* constants from Tickit::Term.

take_focus

$win->take_focus

Causes this window to take the input focus, and updates the cursor position to the stored active position given by cursor_at.

focus

$win->focus( $line, $col )

A convenient shortcut combining cursor_at with take_focus; setting the focus cursor position and taking the input focus.

is_focused

$focused = $win->is_focused

Returns true if this window currently has the input focus

is_steal_input

$steal = $win->is_steal_input

Returns true if this window is currently stealing input from its siblings

set_steal_input

$win->set_steal_input( $steal )

Controls whether this window is currently stealing input from its siblings

EVENTS

The following event types are emitted and may be observed by "bind_event".

key

Emitted when a key on the keyboard is pressed while this window or one of its child windows has the input focus, or is set to steal input anyway.

The event handler should return a true value if it considers the keypress dealt with, or false to pass it up to its parent window.

Before passing it to its parent, a window will also try any other non-focused sibling windows of the currently-focused window in order of creation (though note this order is not necessarily the order the child widgets that own those windows were created or added to their container).

If no window actually handles the keypress, then every window will eventually be consulted about it, preferring windows closer to the focused one.

This broadcast-like behaviour allows widgets to handle keypresses that should make sense even though their window does not actually have the keyboard focus. This feature should be used sparingly, to only capture one or two keypresses that really make sense; for example to capture the PageUp and PageDown keys in a scrolling list, or a numbered function key that performs some special action.

mouse

Emitted when a mouse button is pressed or released, the cursor moved while a button is held (a dragging event), or the wheel is scrolled.

The following event names may be observed:

press

A mouse button has been pressed down on this cell

drag_start

The mouse was moved while a button was held, and was initially in the given cell

drag

The mouse was moved while a button was held, and is now in the given cell

drag_outside

The mouse was moved outside of the window that handled the drag_start event, and is still being dragged.

drag_drop

A mouse button was released after having been moved, while in the given cell

drag_stop

The drag operation has finished. This event is always given directly to the window that handled the drag_start event, rather than the window on which the mouse release event happened.

release

A mouse button was released after being pressed

wheel

The mouse wheel was moved. button will indicate the wheel direction as a string up or down.

The invoked code should return a true value if it considers the mouse event dealt with, or false to pass it up to its parent window.

Once a dragging operation has begun via drag_start, the window that handled the event will always receive drag, drag_outside, and an eventual drag_stop event even if the mouse moves outside that window. No other window will receive a drag_outside or drag_stop event than the one that started the operation.

geomchange

Emitted when the window is resized or repositioned; i.e. whenever its geometry changes.

expose

Emitted when a region of the window is exposed by the expose method, or implicitly because it or another window has changed size, been shown or hidden, or the stacking order has been changed.

When invoked, render buffer passed in the event will have its origin set to that of the window, and its clipping will be set to the damage rectangle.

If any child windows overlap the region, these will be exposed first, before the containing window.

focus

Emitted when the window gains or loses input focus.

If the focus_child_notify behavior is enabled, this callback is also invoked for changes of focus on descendent windows. In this case, it is passed an additional argument, being the immediate child window in which the focus chain has now changed (which may or may not be the focused window directly; it could itself be another ancestor).

When a window gains focus, any of its ancestors that have focus_child_notify enabled will be informed first, from the outermost inwards, before the window itself. When one loses focus, it is notified first, and then its parents from the innermost outwards.

AUTHOR

Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>

Module Install Instructions

To install Tickit::Window, simply copy and paste either of the commands in to your terminal

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